Listen&Learn: Waiting for Godot
22nd June 2022 by Jaksyn PeacockPre-listening vocabulary
- tragicomedy: a type of play that tells a serious story with humourous elements
- subvert: to change the way something is usually done
- critic: someone who gives their opinion about something
- allegory: a text that has a hidden meaning under the literal story it tells
- mundane: boring, ordinary
Listening activity
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 1:17 — 1.2MB)
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Gapfill exercise
Comprehension questions
See answers below
- The writer of Waiting for Godot was
a. French
b. Irish
c. English - The play is considered a
a. romance
b. tragicomedy
c. tragedy - Waiting for Godot became famous because
a. it criticized religion
b. it subverted common play structures
c. it told an epic story
Discussion/essay questions
- Do you prefer stories with exciting plots or thought-provoking ideas?
Transcript
Waiting for Godot is a 1952 play by Irish writer Samuel Beckett. Beckett originally wrote the play in French, and translated it into English a few years later. It is considered a tragicomedy. The play is about two men, Vladimir and Estragon, who speak to each other while they wait for a man named Godot to meet them. Godot never arrives. Waiting for Godot became famous for subverting common play structures. Besides the conversations between Vladimir and Estragon, not much happens in the play. Many people have opinions about the hidden meaning of the story. Some critics believe that Waiting for Godot is a religious allegory, and that Godot represents God. Others believe that the play represents the mundane parts of life, and that Godot represents death.
Answers to comprehension questions
1b 2b 3b